Intelligence and Learning
Herausgegeben:Friedman, Morton
Intelligence and Learning
Herausgegeben:Friedman, Morton
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This volume contains the Proceedings of an International Conference on Intelligence and Learning held at York University, England, on July 16-20, 1979. The conference was made possible with the support and assistance of the following agencies: NAT 0 Scientific Division, specifically the Human Factors panel, was the major sponsor of the conference. Special thanks are due to Dr. B. A. Bayraktar, who helped organize the conference. Special appreciation is also expressed for the support of the University of York where the conference was held, the University of Alberta, the University of…mehr
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This volume contains the Proceedings of an International Conference on Intelligence and Learning held at York University, England, on July 16-20, 1979. The conference was made possible with the support and assistance of the following agencies: NAT 0 Scientific Division, specifically the Human Factors panel, was the major sponsor of the conference. Special thanks are due to Dr. B. A. Bayraktar, who helped organize the conference. Special appreciation is also expressed for the support of the University of York where the conference was held, the University of Alberta, the University of California, Los Angeles, the Medical Research Council, especially its Developmental Psychology Research U nit in London, and the British Council. The conference was jointly directed by J. P. Das and N. 0' Connor. The directors appreciate the assistance in administrative matters of Patricia Chobater and Emma Collins of the University of Alberta. The Editors of the Proceedings acknowledge and appreciatethe following individuals who assisted in the production of the volume at the University of California, Los Angeles: Francine Gray, Janet Koblen and Richard Russell. Special thanks go to Keith Felton, who prepared the final manuscript, and Carol Saro, who assisted the editors and prepared the indexes. Morton P. Friedman J. P. Das Neil O'Connor CONTENTS Section INTRODUCTION 1.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Nato Conference Series 14
- Verlag: Springer US / Springer, Berlin
- Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1981
- Seitenzahl: 640
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. März 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 35mm
- Gewicht: 1087g
- ISBN-13: 9781468410853
- ISBN-10: 1468410857
- Artikelnr.: 39502475
- Nato Conference Series 14
- Verlag: Springer US / Springer, Berlin
- Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1981
- Seitenzahl: 640
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. März 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 35mm
- Gewicht: 1087g
- ISBN-13: 9781468410853
- ISBN-10: 1468410857
- Artikelnr.: 39502475
Section 1. Introduction.- 1. Introduction and Overview.- 2. Intelligence and Learning.- 3. Recent Issues in the Developmental Approach to Mental Retardation.- 4. Reaction Time and Intelligence.- 5. Intelligence and Learning: Specific and General Handicap.- Section 2. The Nature of Intelligence - Symposium.- 6. The Nature of Intelligence.- 7. The Primary Mental Ability.- 8. Genetic Differences in "g" and Real Life.- Section 3. The Nature of Intelligence - Papers.- 9. Physiological Evidence that Demand for Processing Capacity Varies with Intelligence.- 10. Closure Factors: Evidence for Different Modes of Processing.- 11. Test Structure and Cognitive Style.- 12. Intelligence and the Orienting Reflex.- Section 4. Individual Variability and Intelligence.- 13. Individual Differences in Memory Span.- 14. Towards a Symbiosis of Cognitive Psychology and Psychometrics.- 15. Development and Modifiability of Adult Intellectual 169 Performance: An Examination of Cognitive Intervention in Later Adulthood.- 16. The Relationship Between Memory Span and Processing Speed.- Section 5. Piagetian Approaches.- 17. Cognitive Mechanisms and Training.- 18. Training and Logic: Comment on Magali Bovet's Paper.- 19. The Role of Social Experience in Cognitive Development.- 20. Knowledge Development and Memory Performance.- 21. Reasoning and Problem Solving in Young Children.- 22. Logical Competence in Infancy: Object Percept or Object Concept?.- Section 6. Piaget and Development.- 23. Piagetian Perspective in Draw-A-House Tree Task: A Longitudinal Study of the Drawings of Rural Children.- 24. Metacognition and Intelligence Theory.- 25. Adaptation to Equilibration: A More Complex Model of the Applications of Piaget's Theory to Early Childhood Education.- 26. A Model of CognitiveDevelopment.- 27. The Use of a Piagetian Analysis of Infant Development to Predict Cognitive and Language Development at Two Years.- Section 7. Cognitive Psychological Analyses.- 28. Testing Process Theories of Intelligence.- 29. Coding and Planning Processes.- 30. Process Theories: Form or Substance? A Discussion of the Papers by Butterfield, Das Jarman.- Section 8. Intelligence and Cognitive Processes.- 31. Toward a Unified Componential Theory of Human Intelligence: I. Fluid Ability.- 32. Toward a Theory of Aptitude for Learning: I. Fluid and Crystallized Abilities and their Correlates.- Section 9. Reading Processes.- 33. Comparison of Reading and Spelling Strategies in Normal and Reading Disabled Children.- 34. Active Perceiving and the Reflection-Impulsivity Dimension.- 35. Cognitive Strategies in Relation to Reading Disability.- 36. Comparative Efficacy of Group Therapy and Remedial Reading with Reading Disabled Children.- 37. Coding Strategies and Reading Comprehension.- Section 10. Cross-Cultural Approaches.- 38. Cultural Systems and Cognitive Styles.- 39. Culture, Cognitive Tests and Cognitive Models: Pursuing Cognitive Universals by Testing Across Cultures.- Section 11. Individual Differences and Cognition.- 40. Human Ageing and Disturbances of Memory Control Processes Underlying "Intelligent" Performance of Some Cognitive Tasks.- 41. Ability Factors and the Speed of Information Processing.- 42. The Design of a Robot Mind: A Theoretical Approach To Issues In Intelligence.- 43. Cognitive Psychology and Psychometric Theory.- Section 12. Mental Retardation and Learing Disabilities.- 44. A Comparison of Psychometric and Piagetian Assessments of Symbolic Functioning in Down's Syndrome Children.- 45. A Comparison of the Conservation Acquisition of MentallyRetarded and Nonretarded Children.- 46. Generalization of a Rehearsal Strategy in Mildly Retarded Children.- 47. Cognitive Processing in Learning Disabled and Normally Achieving Boys in a Goal-Oriented Task.- 48. Home Environment, Cognitive Processes, and Intelligence: A Path Analysis.- Section 13. Pathology of Intelligence.- 49. Inducing Flexible Thinking: The Problem of Access.- 50. Hemispheric Intelligence: The Case of the Raven Progressive Matrices.- Section 14. Intellectual Abilities.- 51. Individual Differences in the Patterning of Curves of D.Q. and I.Q. Scores from 6 months to 17 Years.- 52. The Social Ecology of Intelligence in the British Isles, France and Spain.- 53. Verbal Ability, Attention, and Automaticity.- 54. Ability and Strategy Differences in Map Learning.- Section 15. Information Processing.- 55. Information Processing - "Old Wine In New Bottles" or A Challenge to the Psychology of Learning and Intelligence?.- 56. General Intelligence and Mental Speed: Their Relationship and Development.- 57. Presentation Mode and Organisational Strategies in Young Children's Free Recall.- 58. Qualitative and Quantitative Aspects in the Development of Proportional Reasoning.- Name Index.
Section 1. Introduction.- 1. Introduction and Overview.- 2. Intelligence and Learning.- 3. Recent Issues in the Developmental Approach to Mental Retardation.- 4. Reaction Time and Intelligence.- 5. Intelligence and Learning: Specific and General Handicap.- Section 2. The Nature of Intelligence - Symposium.- 6. The Nature of Intelligence.- 7. The Primary Mental Ability.- 8. Genetic Differences in "g" and Real Life.- Section 3. The Nature of Intelligence - Papers.- 9. Physiological Evidence that Demand for Processing Capacity Varies with Intelligence.- 10. Closure Factors: Evidence for Different Modes of Processing.- 11. Test Structure and Cognitive Style.- 12. Intelligence and the Orienting Reflex.- Section 4. Individual Variability and Intelligence.- 13. Individual Differences in Memory Span.- 14. Towards a Symbiosis of Cognitive Psychology and Psychometrics.- 15. Development and Modifiability of Adult Intellectual 169 Performance: An Examination of Cognitive Intervention in Later Adulthood.- 16. The Relationship Between Memory Span and Processing Speed.- Section 5. Piagetian Approaches.- 17. Cognitive Mechanisms and Training.- 18. Training and Logic: Comment on Magali Bovet's Paper.- 19. The Role of Social Experience in Cognitive Development.- 20. Knowledge Development and Memory Performance.- 21. Reasoning and Problem Solving in Young Children.- 22. Logical Competence in Infancy: Object Percept or Object Concept?.- Section 6. Piaget and Development.- 23. Piagetian Perspective in Draw-A-House Tree Task: A Longitudinal Study of the Drawings of Rural Children.- 24. Metacognition and Intelligence Theory.- 25. Adaptation to Equilibration: A More Complex Model of the Applications of Piaget's Theory to Early Childhood Education.- 26. A Model of CognitiveDevelopment.- 27. The Use of a Piagetian Analysis of Infant Development to Predict Cognitive and Language Development at Two Years.- Section 7. Cognitive Psychological Analyses.- 28. Testing Process Theories of Intelligence.- 29. Coding and Planning Processes.- 30. Process Theories: Form or Substance? A Discussion of the Papers by Butterfield, Das Jarman.- Section 8. Intelligence and Cognitive Processes.- 31. Toward a Unified Componential Theory of Human Intelligence: I. Fluid Ability.- 32. Toward a Theory of Aptitude for Learning: I. Fluid and Crystallized Abilities and their Correlates.- Section 9. Reading Processes.- 33. Comparison of Reading and Spelling Strategies in Normal and Reading Disabled Children.- 34. Active Perceiving and the Reflection-Impulsivity Dimension.- 35. Cognitive Strategies in Relation to Reading Disability.- 36. Comparative Efficacy of Group Therapy and Remedial Reading with Reading Disabled Children.- 37. Coding Strategies and Reading Comprehension.- Section 10. Cross-Cultural Approaches.- 38. Cultural Systems and Cognitive Styles.- 39. Culture, Cognitive Tests and Cognitive Models: Pursuing Cognitive Universals by Testing Across Cultures.- Section 11. Individual Differences and Cognition.- 40. Human Ageing and Disturbances of Memory Control Processes Underlying "Intelligent" Performance of Some Cognitive Tasks.- 41. Ability Factors and the Speed of Information Processing.- 42. The Design of a Robot Mind: A Theoretical Approach To Issues In Intelligence.- 43. Cognitive Psychology and Psychometric Theory.- Section 12. Mental Retardation and Learing Disabilities.- 44. A Comparison of Psychometric and Piagetian Assessments of Symbolic Functioning in Down's Syndrome Children.- 45. A Comparison of the Conservation Acquisition of MentallyRetarded and Nonretarded Children.- 46. Generalization of a Rehearsal Strategy in Mildly Retarded Children.- 47. Cognitive Processing in Learning Disabled and Normally Achieving Boys in a Goal-Oriented Task.- 48. Home Environment, Cognitive Processes, and Intelligence: A Path Analysis.- Section 13. Pathology of Intelligence.- 49. Inducing Flexible Thinking: The Problem of Access.- 50. Hemispheric Intelligence: The Case of the Raven Progressive Matrices.- Section 14. Intellectual Abilities.- 51. Individual Differences in the Patterning of Curves of D.Q. and I.Q. Scores from 6 months to 17 Years.- 52. The Social Ecology of Intelligence in the British Isles, France and Spain.- 53. Verbal Ability, Attention, and Automaticity.- 54. Ability and Strategy Differences in Map Learning.- Section 15. Information Processing.- 55. Information Processing - "Old Wine In New Bottles" or A Challenge to the Psychology of Learning and Intelligence?.- 56. General Intelligence and Mental Speed: Their Relationship and Development.- 57. Presentation Mode and Organisational Strategies in Young Children's Free Recall.- 58. Qualitative and Quantitative Aspects in the Development of Proportional Reasoning.- Name Index.